The Minority Report Is Here.......

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  • Hardrock69
    DIAMOND STATUS
    • Feb 2005
    • 21898

    The Minority Report Is Here.......



    Note there are links to further info about the software, the Seattle Police being under Federal investigation, etc. at the link above....

    After initial testing in two precincts, The Seattle Police Department and Mayor Mike McGinn announced last week that they will now deploy their “Predictive Policing” software to all five precincts.

    The federally-funded cloud-based crime prediction software known as PREDPOL, uses mathematical algorithms similar to ones used in earthquake prediction to predict when and where a future crime is most likely to take place down to a 500-square foot area. The program combines five years’ worth of past crime data with sociological information about criminal behavior.

    “We’ve had anecdotal successes with the pilot project in East and Southwest Precincts, so we’re expanding Predictive Policing citywide,” said Mayor McGinn

    “We’re asking the community to get involved by reporting even minor property crimes so we can improve our data set and predict where crime is likely to occur. This is a tool that can help us prevent some crimes before they happen, so it’s very important that community members get involved.”

    Despite the assurance that the program doesn’t target individuals, civil liberties advocates have already questioned the software and the possible dangers to privacy and constitutional rights down the road. Some worry the Police may target citizens who happen to be in the wrong place at the wrong time, simply based off of what a computer tells them.

    Given the City of Seattle’s involvement in the secret pilot program TrapWire, a surveilance camera program that ran citizens faces through facial recognition software unknowingly, Seattle residents are hesitant to trust the program or the Seattle Police who were recently under federal investigation for their routine and widespread use of excessive force.

    Even with some hesitant citizens, the Seattle police are asking local residents to report any and every crime to help build up the department’s crime prediction database.

    “With the community’s help, we can prevent some crimes before they take place by being in the right place at the right time,” said Deputy Chief Metz.

    Seattle also received a $5 million federal grant last year which went towards 30 Department of Homeland Security-funded surveillance cameras on Seattle’s waterfront area. Despite the claim that the cameras were for the coast line to protect the Port of Seattle from terrorism, the cameras were caught pointing inward, watching Seattle residents by “accident.”


  • Hardrock69
    DIAMOND STATUS
    • Feb 2005
    • 21898

    #2
    Here is a report on the software itself:



    PredPol Brings Big Data to Law Enforcement with $1.3 Million Round

    The futuristic world of “Minority Report” has become a fantasy for many technology companies. One of the more controversial technologies shown in the movie is the ability to see the future by holding psychic beings captive and harnessing their abilities, a practice that Tom Cruise (the character’s name isn’t important) endeavors to end.

    PredPol, a cloud-based software company, has raised $1.3 million from Plantronics’ Ken Kannappan and Barbara Scherer and a handful of other investors in a friends and family seed round to help make the Minority Report future a reality – with one key difference. “We don’t have anyone laying in baths predicting the future,” as PredPol’s director of government relations and strategy and former mayor of Santa Cruz Ryan Coonerty puts it.

    That’s a relief.

    PredPol began as an academic study by UCLA professors Jeff Brantingham and George Mohler. (Mohler has since moved to Santa Clara University.) Originally used to predict earthquakes, Brantingham and Mohler tweaked the algorithms they had developed to predict crime. Law enforcement agencies that license PredPol’s software via a SaaS model are able to collect data about criminal acts and where they occur; the software then uses that data and predicts where and when future crimes are most likely to occur, down to 500 square foot blocks.

    Developed via a research partnership with the Los Angeles Police Department, the professors’ algorithm has been used on a trial basis since 2011. CEO Caleb Baskin says that PredPol’s software became twice as effective during that trial period, and the LAPD saw a 36 percent drop in crime rates in the participating district.

    A for-profit company with an exclusive license on the professors’ work from UCLA and Santa Clara University, PredPol’s cloud-based SaaS offering is already used by six law enforcement agencies in the US. The company is currently in talks with six more – one of which is overseas – and that number can be expected to grow; some 225 agencies have approached PredPol seeking to utilize the company’s technology in some form.

    Of course, PredPol is continually working on its core product to improve accuracy and effectiveness. I asked Coonerty if the software might someday become sophisticated enough to predict crime on an individual level, and he was quick to set me straight. “We have no plans to move anywhere close to the individual. You’ll – rightly – run into a variety of Constitutional problems almost immediately.” If anything, he says, the company is helping remove bias against individuals from the equation.

    “If you send police officers out with a mandate to cut crime by 10 percent by the end of the quarter, they’re going to use their gut instincts to do it. [PredPol] gives them more knowledge and allows them to focus on problem places at the right time instead of focusing on individuals,” he says.

    PredPol is helping law enforcement agencies in two ways, then. The first is by telling them how to better use their limited resources through big data and modern technologies. The second is preventing crime, which helps the community (in obvious ways) but also saves law enforcement agencies money.

    “[PredPol is a] new but well-backed company that is bringing private sector analytics to the public sector, [specifically] law enforcement agencies,” Baskin says. “They need to find ways to do more with less. A tool that tells them how to allocate resources to fight crime in places before they occur fits the bill.”




    One funny statement in the above article that is true:

    One of the more controversial technologies shown in the movie is the ability to see the future by holding psychic beings captive and harnessing their abilities, a practice that Tom Cruise (the character’s name isn’t important) endeavors to end.

    The name of any of Tom Cruise's characters is NOT important.

    After all.....it is only a movie about Tom Cruise!:D

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